SUDAN
GOV'T DISSOLVED, NEW PM TASKED TO FORM A SMALLER CABINET
Sudan, Central East Africa
Sudan’s president Omar al-Bashir dissolved the government on
Sunday and named a new prime minister who is tasked to form a smaller cabinet,
as the country struggles to fix the crisis-hit economy battered in recent
months by shortages of bread, fuel and hard currency.
Bashir
named Motazz Moussa as the country’s prime minister. He replaces Bakri Hassan
Saleh, who was appointed in 2017 as the country’s first prime minister since
Bashir came to power in 1989.
Moussa
had been serving as minister of irrigation and electricity before the
government was dissolved.
Saleh,
who had been serving as both prime minister and vice president before the
shake-up, will stay on in the newly created post of first vice president, while
Osman Yusuf Kubur was appointed second vice president.
The
announcement came just after Bashir called an emergency meeting of ruling party
officials in the presidential palace on the back of growing economic concerns
over price rises and shortages.
No
other ministerial appointments were announced, but the number of ministries in
the new government will be slashed to 21 from 31, a move intended to cut down
on spending, National Congress Party Deputy Chairman Faisal Hassan told a news
conference.
The
ministers of foreign affairs, defence and presidential affairs will remain in
their posts when the new government is formed, Hassan said.
Sudan’s distressed economy
Khartoum
has been trying to slash expenditures as it grapples with record high
inflation, the hard-currency shortage and growing concern over low levels of
liquidity at commercial banks.
Long
queues outside commercial banks have become a fixture around Khartoum in recent
weeks as the liquidity of the local currency has dwindled and ATMs
have been emptied of cash. Daily withdrawal limits in some places have been set
as low as 500 Sudanese pounds ($16.60).
A
presidency statement said the latest measures were necessary to solve “the
state of distress and frustration faced by the country during the last period”.
Sudan’s
economy has been struggling since the south seceded in 2011, taking with it
three-quarters of oil output and depriving Khartoum of a crucial source of
foreign currency.
The
lifting of 20-year-old U.S. trade sanctions last year was expected to usher in
a more prosperous era for a country that had long been isolated.
But
economic woes have only deepened as a black market for U.S. dollars has in
effect replaced the formal banking system, making it more difficult and expensive
to import essential supplies such as wheat.
The
dollar has risen to about 47 pounds on the black market in recent months,
against an official rate of about 30 pounds. That helped to push annual
inflation to around 64 percent in July.
A
doubling of the price of bread in January, after the government eliminated
subsidies, triggered demonstrations.
Sudan
has been without a central bank governor since June, when Hazem Abdelqader died
after suffering a heart attack while on a trip to Turkey.
News source: africanews.com
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